The book’s place within the atlas
This is a dialogue book that places Arkoun before the questions of the contemporary world: violence, politics, the relationship with the West, and mutual misunderstanding. It links Arkoun’s ideas to a global event and to the transformations that followed 11 September, making the political present part of a broader reading of Arkoun’s project.
What distinguishes this book
This book adds a direct presence of the political present within Arkoun’s project. It does not stop at theoretical reflection; rather, it enters into questions of confrontation, justice, the limits of power, and how the understanding of Islam changes after major global transformations.
Main axes
- Global violence and 11 September
- Legitimacy and democracy
- Understanding the West and modernity
- Responding to terrorism
- Islam and politics in a globalized world
- Cognitive and religious reform
The book’s image in the layers of claims
The book’s material is distributed across three interconnected layers:
- atoms: the partial units that capture the nuances of meaning and their details
- structure: the paths that organize the argument and connect its parts
- clusters: the broader fields that gather atoms and structure into composite theses
The overarching thesis
Core clusters
- The crisis of the Arab-Islamic world stems from the breakdown of legitimacy, critique, and institutions
- Discourses of the enemy, jihad, and al-Qaeda produce a transnational sacred violence
- September reshapes the political imagination and the logic of global conflict
- Understanding violence and Islamic modernization requires comparative history and contextual differentiation
- Arkoun’s approach deconstructs truth and discourse and lays the groundwork for cognitive and religious reform
- Critique of the war on terror rejects totalizing power and calls for calibrated global justice
Core structure
- 11 September rebuilt global conflict against the globalized world
- The events of September opened a new global phase for American power
- Arkoun calls for renewing the understanding of Islam through modern knowledge and Mediterranean openness
- Arkoun rejects linear explanation and replaces it with anthropological and critical analysis
- Afghanistan must be understood within a political network, not as an isolated target
Atoms
Relations between the layers
The atoms reveal details such as 11 September, al-Qaeda, Bin Laden, legitimacy, and modernity. The structure then gathers them into clearer interpretive paths: global conflict, American power, religious reform, and understanding Afghanistan within a broader political network. The clusters, in turn, connect these paths to one another to show that the book is not about a single event, but about a crisis of meaning, legitimacy, and modernization that extends from politics to knowledge.
What should I read now?
Editorial note
This page is not a copy of the book, nor a substitute summary for it, but rather a reading map of its concepts, arguments, and trajectories. It is recommended to return to the original text in order to grasp the full context.